Showing newest posts with label pop culture. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label pop culture. Show older posts

Friday, July 9, 2010

Claire Danes for Latisse: My So-Called Lashes

This commercial is wrong on so many levels. Not the least of which is the unruly-spiders-for-eye-hair that Claire is now sporting.




More to come.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Sally Draper is Turning Trix!



My Daddy is in advertising ... IN THE FUTURE!

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Top Chef DC: John Somerville will be played by Jeff Goldblum

Top Chef DC sanely asked John "Rasta Goldblum" Somerville to pack his knives and go. In his own words, "I barely had a chance to pull a knife out of my bag." I take that as a threat.

He also tries to mind-snuggle us with "women really love my pastries" and "I'm a really likable kind of a guy." Kind of.

Also, his "toenails grow at a rate that you can't even believe." Oh, that kind of likable.

Hear him say those words and others that will make you never want to eat again:




When he tries to slash Eric Ripert's obscenely beautiful francoface after sneaking back on-set, his sad little toenail-clipping-strewn life story will be made into a movie. And he will be played by Jeff Goldblum wearing several aged and tranquilized llamas on his head.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Creepy Puppets: Steve Carell is Fats

The Amazing Kreskin Knows You're Reading This

Children of the 70s will surely remember having their collective minds blown by The Amazing Kreskin. He lets you know right up front that he's amazing.

Did you also know that his ENTIRE WORLD is amazing? You and your pot-addled / bored / empty / nostalgic mind can be amazed once again as you enter The Amazing World of Kreskin on Hulu.

The show answers the question: What if John "Crossing Over" Edwards had a touch of aspergers and paid a visit to the set of Joker's Wild?



Kreskin not only freaks out the audience by knowing that they know someone with a letter J name, he also graciously hosts a series of poorly-lit celebrities, most of whom have an allergy to natural fibers and regular skin care.

Dame Sybil Leek anyone? How about a hot cup of James Coco?

Friday, May 14, 2010

Baked Kale Chips from Top Chef Masters

If you were intrigued by Chef Jody Adams' Lisa Simpson-inspired plate of vegetarian goodness, which included baked kale chips, then we have at least that in common.

I made them tonight, and they really are addictive. The taste reminds me of roasted broccoli, the texture like roasted seaweed snacks.


Here's the method I tried, based on both Chef Adams' recipe from the Top Chef website, and Lucy Del Rey's recipe on AllRecipes.com.
  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  • Take 1 bundle of organic curly kale, and tear the leaves off of the central stem. 
  • Tear the leaves into bite-sized pieces. Wash and dry them thoroughly.
  • Spread them on a cookie sheet, and toss with about 1/2 Tbsp. of olive oil. Alternately, spray them with olive oil or canola oil.
  • Bake in preheated oven until the ends begin to turn brown and crispy. Both recipes note this as 10 minutes, although both of my batches took closer to 15 minutes.
  • Sprinkle with sea salt and any other flavorings you want.
Jummy!

The kale chips keep surprisingly well, so bake a big batch to make healthy snacking easier.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Marc Maron Stops Being "Defensive Ass": WTF?

On Monday, I had the pleasure of interviewing Marc Maron about his extremely successful podcast, WTF.  The podcast is the perfect combination of monologue and conversation with his comic peers.



Maron talks about keeping the podcast free, bringing out the unexpected in his guests, and why his days of being a defensive ass have run their course.


Also, if you are anywhere near San Francisco on May 10-12, go see Marc Maron at The Purple Onion in North Beach. His live performances are always fresh, brilliant, and definitely not predictable. See a comic genius at work on the same stage on which Lenny Bruce and Richard Pryor once performed.


--

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Creepy Puppets: Love Is a Stranger by Eurythmics

This video used to scare the hell out of me because of the 1.5 seconds of ventriloquist dummy used therein.

Eurythmics: Love is a Stranger.  A fantastic song that no longer makes me wet myself.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

I AM WOMAN?

Did they really, honestly play "I Am Women" for Katheryn Bigelow's Best Director Oscar win tonight?

Why yes.  Yes they did.



Congratulations, Helen Reddy.  My condolences to anyone else in the 21st century who thought we were in the 21st century.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

The Daily Show: Bank of America has some nice dresses for you, Karen

Absolute brilliance ensues at the :50 second mark of this clip.

John Stewart encapsulates how credit card companies find more creative ways to screw their customers than Xaviera Hollander. *rimjob*/*rimshot*

Then Wyatt Cenac talks with a former Bank of America employee to discuss how B of A is worse than the mafia.

Really.

He talks to a former mafia loan shark. Turns out the Bank of America has some beautiful Dior dresses for you, just around the corner. Go ahead.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Dear Alex & Annie...

I'm desperate! What should I do? In these troubled times, our nation could use a hit of Dear Alex & Annie. Not a child of the 70's? Didn't watch upwards of 6 hours of television each Saturday before hitting the pool? It is my honor to school you in the ways of Double A.

CLIFF'S NOTES:
Two youngish summer-stockers looking for work come upon an ad:

Noted specialist in child psychology needs unthreatening, kind of telegenic hosts to serve as mouthpieces to improve shabby pre-teen lives through laughter and song. Ability to shoot real sincere glances at the camera a must.

Thousands would enter. Two would win.



Beginning at approximately 57 seconds into the clip, you'll discover the inspiration for Disney's smash hit "The Princess & The Frog". From acorns, my friends. From acorns.



And they get as good as they give! "That's not very 'riginal," Annie chides Alex when he attempts to form his own thoughts. Proving that what's good for pre-teen geese is good for the gander.

Oh, Dear Alex & Annie,
We need you more than ever!
Americans need your pat advice,
All animated and clever.

So, tie on that bandana!
Buy some mousse! Blow dry!
Flat-chested girls across our land
Need your help to land a guy.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Faye Dunaway's Sitcom

Faye Dunaway had a sitcom.

It's like discovering that Ruth Bader Ginsberg spiked a mean volleyball in her forgotten, big-boned youth.  Or that Aretha Franklin twisted balloon dachshunds as a party clown.

"It Had To Be You" lasted for about one month in 1993, and it seems just right that Robert Urich also starred.

Delicious recipe for 4-episode success?

3/4 cup Dunaway as publishing big-wig
1/2 cup blue-collar Urich
3 blue-collar kids from previous marriage
1 tsp awkward chemistry
1 Tbsp Gumption of Dunaway

Stir until agents are nearly fired.

Notice the discomfort in your lower chakras as you attempt to internally resolve the incongruity of Faye Dunaway and a laugh track.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Bonnie Franklin Taps Her Way Into America's Heart


"Julie!" ~ Bonnie Franklin, One Day At a Time

Fact: Bonnie Franklin loves to tap.  "Maple trees?  That ass?" you may ask.  No!  Tap dance!

And, I'll let you in on a little secret: Bonnie Franklin hates to exercise.  I know these things because I read the cover of her DVD, "I Hate to Exercise, I Love to Tap, starring Bonnie Franklin".

Out of 74 customer reviews on Amazon, this gem of a video has received 66 five-star reviews!  From people who aren't being snarky!  So, it seems she is a legit triple threat: acting, dancing, sassy.  God bless her perky-but-had-it-up-to-here heart.

You can own it.  You should own it. Own it.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Susan Powter: Stop! The insanity is online.

Susan Powter has a website full of the inexplicable ramblings of a woman with bicep-loads of misplaced confidence garnered from years of people telling her that the advice to "eat, breathe and move" changed their lives.

It's fabulous.

Her core advice is akin to wisdom dispensed by a mafioso laundering money through a gym in New Jersey.  "To loose da extra weight?  I think yous oughta eat, breed, and, uh...move.  Okay?  Have a nice day."

Here's one of Susan Powter's video diary entries.  Interspersed with her bon mots are many, many cuts to flowers and trees.  For extra fun, imagine that the foliage is saying things like "Are you okay, ma'am?" and "Leeet's get you up and walking, kiddo.  Come on, don't fall asleep on me."



Bad-min-ton is the game.

Here's Powter lobbying for a position with Dr. Bronner's Magic Soap:
Simply explained, totally understandable and it's true, and you get and you get and you get, extended by popular demand, the kind of demand I like, do it now, it's time!

Also, people write in asking for her advice, and she disgorges gems like this:
Q: Do you believe raw food is better than cooked b/c of the enzymes that are live? Do you believe that cooked foods are addicting?

A?:
I don't
And
Suggesting
Raw for
The epidemic
And it is
Of obesity
Facing millions
Is well
What it is...
Let's start
With movement
And
Whole more
Than processed
Then a little
Lean muscle
Mass and
Cardio endurance
And, now........
I had to put it to sleep.  Let's tell the children that Susan's answer has gone to live on a farm with other visionary writing.

Taken as a whole, the site has a soothing Ti-and-Do-meet-Intervention feeling about it.  Especially enjoy the coherent "Don't even talk to me re: nipples" post.

Susan Powter is ratbones crazy, and I applaud her efforts at documenting said crazy on her website.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Mike Birbiglia on The Moth


Comedian Mike Birbiglia is everywhere right now ~ off-Broadway in his one-man "Sleepwalk With Me", Comedy Central, The Moth, This American Life, and floating through space on his website.

I first heard Mike Birbiglia on The Moth podcast, telling one of the funniest stories to have churned through my fraying earbuds in the past year. His delivery is slow-burn, the story is stupefying. Listen to it now. For free. THE POWER OF COMEDY COMPELLS YOU.



Friday, May 8, 2009

Charles Nelson Reilly DVD for free?! Read on!

As we approach the two-year anniversary of Charles Nelson Reilly's death, there is no better time to remember the singular wit of one of the 1970's most flamboyant and un-closeted entertainers (which is to say, he was never really out, but never really in).

Here's CNR and the late Brett Somers busting chops:


I consider myself very lucky (thanks to my friend Kevin) to have seen Charles Nelson Reilly onstage in 2004 at the El Portal Theatre.  "Save It For the Stage: The Life of Reilly" was his one-man memoir performance, and it was a surreal pleasure to see him in person.  I was 8 months pregnant at the time, and the fact that I could sit still for 2 hours to watch a man reminisce about his life from birth to present day is a testament to Charles Nelson Reilly's natural ability to entertain.

While you can no longer get within ascot-sniffing distance of the dearly departed CNR, you can own the film adaptation of his one-man show for free (wha?) with the purchase of any one of a number of classy t-shirts at charlesnelsonreilly.com.



Here's one of the best moments of Saturday Night Live's not-very-classic years.  Alec Baldwin as Charles Nelson Reilly.  It's as if someone crept into my head during a particularly intimate moment of abandon, and then made it into a little skit.
 


About 4 years ago, I ran into freaked out Alec Baldwin over my love for this sketch.
Saturday morning, The Grove, on my way to breakfast at The Farm.

Alec Baldwin, alone, blustering across the nearly empty promenade, clearly on his way to point B. 

Me (more ebullient than I had intended): "Mr. Baldwin, I just have to tell you that your impression of Charles Nelson Reilly was one of the sexiest things I've ever seen on television."

Alec Baldwin (face briefly distorted in confusion/fear-for-life): "Um...thanks?  Thanks." Continues on his way to point B, only more quickly.
Don't hate me because I have such fabulous encounters with celebrities.

Here's to you, Charles Nelson Reilly.  Your glasses wiggle will never die.

Aaron Altman: Cerebral, supportive hijinx await!

Plinky prompt of the day:

"Which movie's characters would you befriend in real life?"


Broadcast News: In a movie full of newsy backstabbers, Albert Brooks' character is funny, supportive, smart, funny, neurotic, lovesick, funny, kind of sweaty, and altogether endearing. And funny. 

I love Albert Brooks. 

And so, I would hang out with any of his characters, even Hank Scorpio. 

"Wouldn't this be a great world if insecurity and desperation made us more attractive? If needy were a turn on?" 

Typically, not so much. But in the form of Aaron Altman, shape of Albert Brooks, I know we'd make great wonder twins.